Online Encyclopedia

EISLEBEN (Lat. Islebia)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V09, Page 136 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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EISLEBEN (
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Lat. Islebia)
  , a
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town of Germany, in the Prussian province of Saxony, 24 M . W. by N. from Halle, on the railway to
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Nordhausen and Cassel . Pop . (1905) 23,898 . It is divided into an old and a new town (Altstadt and Neustadt) . Among its
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principal buildings are the church of St Andrew (Andreaskirche), which contains numerous monuments of the
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counts of
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Mansfeld; the church of St Peter and St Paul (Peter-Paulkirche), containing the font in which Luther was baptized; the royal gymnasium (classical school), founded by Luther shortly before his
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death in 1546; and the hospital . Eisleben is celebrated as the place where Luther was born and died . The house in which he was born was burned in 1689, but was rebuilt in 1693 as a
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free school for orphans . This school fell into decay under the regime of the
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kingdom of Westphalia, but was restored in 1817 by King Frederick William III. of Prussia, who, in 1819, transferred it to a new
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building behind the old house . The house in which Luther died was restored towards the end of the loth century, and his death chamber. is still preserved . A
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bronze statue of Luther by Rudolf Siemering (1835-1905) was unveiled in 1883 . Eisleben has long been the centre of an important
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mining
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district (Luther was a miner's son), the principal products being
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silver and copper .

It possesses smelting

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works and a school of mining . The earliest record of Eisleben is dated 974 . In 1045, at which time it belonged to the counts of Mansfeld, it received the right to hold markets, coin
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money, and levy tolls . From1531 to 1710 it was the seat of the cadet
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line of the counts of Mansfeld-Eisleben . After the extinction of the main line of the counts of Mansfeld, Eisleben fell to Saxony, and, in the
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partition of Saxony by the congress of Vienna in 1815, was assigned to Prussia . See G . Grossler, Urkundliche Gesch . Eislebens bis zum Ende
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des 12 . Jahrhunderts (Halle, 1875) ; Chronicon Islebiense; Eisleben Stadtchronik aus den Jahren 1520-1738, edited from the
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original, with notes by Grossler and
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Sommer (Eisleben, 1882) .

End of Article: EISLEBEN (Lat. Islebia)
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